Show newer

@freemo I'd prefer not to. I have zero experience with Ruby, let alone Ruby on Rails, so it'd take me *far* more time than someone already familiar with a Mastodon codebase.

(Especially given that I'm already fighting to catch up on maintainership on my own projects, which I allowed to lapse for the last while.)

@freemo To clarify, I do understand that it's served up by the site that hosts the post I'm trying to fave/reply to/etc.

I'm asking whether an option could be added to opt out of it when both the user and the post are on qoto.org and, thus, the code serving up /interact can see my session cookie.

Show thread

@freemo Given how much I use middle-click as part of a "triage first, read and fave later" workflow, do you think we could get an option in qoto.org's Preferences to skip the "/interact" page (the page with the "Proceed to ..." button), rather than just pre-filling the username?

For anyone who might be following this for updates to existing entries on my blog, I've added "YouTube's Copyright System Isn't Broken. The World's Is" and '"Games as a service" is fraud.' as related mentions in my "The Most Eye-Opening Things I’ve Ever Read" post:

blog.ssokolow.com/archives/201

@reykjalin @sir @newt OK, watched it and anything I could say to praise it would feel like an understatement.

The combination of length, quality, and topic remind me of Ross Scott's `"Games as a service" is fraud.`

youtube.com/watch?v=tUAX0gnZ3N

@kev Since I was just reminded of a specific example I need to report, here's what I mean when I say that Gutenberg/Block Editor for WordPress is maddening.

If you are trying to add a block of text to an existing bulleted list in Word or LibreOffice or TinyMCE, the easiest way is to turn the first item into a bullet, then backspace and then hit Enter on each successive element.

In Gutenberg, backspacing a block boundary moves your pointer from the beginning of the paragraph to the end.

It reminds me of Lord i/o's lord.io/blog/2019/text-editing and the sheer number of those frustrating little bugs I manage to trip over, combined with how WP itself will mangle an article if I forget to close a </dd> or </dt> tag when manually inserting a <dl>, is why I'd rather write Markdown or ReST in Vim to blog.

As Ryan T. Harter said, Don't make me code in your text box!

blog.harterrt.com/coding_in_te

@ticoombs @tomosaigon I don't post from touchscreens, period.

I just take minimal notes through whatever means I find most convenient at the time, and then wait until I get back to the buckling spring keyboard on my desktop PC.

@strypey

2. But, these days, those apps are very often specialized browsers, which make it trivial for the vendor to update compared to the old native clients.

3. However, the thing that has always allowed Windows to beat out its competitors was backward-compatibility with users' existing software... be it DOS software on a machine with Win16 or Win16 software on a Win32 machine. The whole rationale for Win9x's relationship with DOS was was legacy compatibility.

devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewt

@strypey

1. True.

2. I was thinking more about how many people are on services like Discord, as opposed to services like ICQ, AIM, YIM, MSN Messenger, etc., where they had to push an update to an offline client before they could change the protocol.

3. Not as much as one would hope. One of the big things that determines real-world adoption on the desktop is games, and it's a lot harder to kick x86 than to kick Windows, since you can't dual-boot/Wine/Proton the x86 vs. other ISA distinction.

@Venn Since YouTube's comment system isn't the most helpful, I'll mirror my comment here:

Those cables vary, depending on how much the particular batch-maker decided to pinch pennies. I have some that look identical externally and work fine, but I wound up getting a refund on another that didn't work.

Since then, I've discovered an explanation of what was probably wrong (missing components) and a DIY fix for it at karusisemus.wordpress.com/2017

A little bit of a counterproductive phrasing to use for a single link to a site that's otherwise known to be trustworthy, don't you think, YouTube?

@fatboy ...a third option for ShowDotFiles would also be nice, so it hides them from the completion list by default but doesn't refuse to show completions if I explicitly try to Tab-complete something beginning with a dot.

@fatboy Yeah.

Not exactly what I'd like, but definitely the best balance for what I want right now.

(eg. At least in the newest version on *buntu 16.04 LTS, it still doesn't have support for staying resident (and binding the hotkey via XGrabKey) to ensure it stays snappy when a nightly backup run evicts the disk cache.)

I don't trust myself to write C or C++ but, if I can ever find the time to justify taking on another project, maybe I'll write some patches for github.com/buster/rrun

@lkundrak@octodon.social @sir

Except that it's not as good at finding niche stuff. When the answer is something like a tutorial on driving an OPL3-based soundcard from DOS or a forum post on some niche topic, Google blows DDG out of the water.

(I say this as someone who uses DDG as his default search engine.)

@ndegruchy@fosstodon.org @cavaliertusky

From what I've seen, it looks like their plan is going in the direction of "virtualize Win32 in containers on top of a locked-down iOS-like base Windows platform".

For example, osnews.com/story/131368/how-wi

@Vergam It'd certainly keep me away.

I refuse to endorse any system which discriminates against people who can't afford to meet a certain hardware or bandwidth standard.

(Which is also one of the reasons that I steer people away from Discord whenever possible. Above and beyond the usual reasons, they reserve the right to demand SMS verification (with no exemptions) to regain access to your account if they ever see you coming from what they see as a suspicious IP.)

@cavaliertusky I wonder if it's the orange-ness.

Our current two cats are the first orange ones we've ever had and they love hanging out in the bathroom too.

@reykjalin @sir @newt

Three years later, the state of things then prompted a video explaining how to play the system to use Content ID yourself to ensure that, no matter what happens to your account, nobody else can take 100% of the revenue.

youtube.com/watch?v=Mz14Ul-r63

(The TL;DR is that there exist distribution companies like cdbaby you can partner with, who have access to Content ID, so he composed an outro tune to use on his videos and had them monetize that for him, minus cut.)

@reykjalin @sir @newt Given that it's 42.5 minutes long, I haven't had time to watch that yet, but the super short abstract reminds me of Jim Sterling's "Copyright Deadlock" trick for giving the finger to people abusing YouTube monetization to steal ad revenue on videos they don't have a right to.

youtube.com/watch?v=cK8i6aMG9V

@rfquerin Don't let misinformation spread.

(But I'm not exactly the best person to ask. I have no fear of being "that guy" and generally feel that, if someone has a problem with it, I should seek better people to interact with anyway.)

Show older
Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.